Union says no negotiations scheduled as Hochul briefed
In a post on X, Governor Hochul said she has been briefed by MTA officials on alternate service plans and the status of negotiations.
Hochul added that the MTA remains ready to negotiate and encouraged both sides to "work around the clock toward a deal that ends this strike."
However, in an update released Saturday evening, the LIRR unions called it an "open-ended strike" and said no talks had been scheduled for the day. The unions also confirmed to ABC News that, despite claims in Hochul's post, MTA officials had not reached out to them about negotiations.
According to the union statement, talks broke down when the MTA added "healthcare takeaways and other concessionary issues to the table literally in the 11th hour before a midnight strike deadline. These regressive management demands had never been raised previously."
The unions also criticized comments made by MTA officials following the strike announcement and said that, despite the agency saying higher wages for workers would lead to increased fares, the Presidential Emergency Board's expert panel found otherwise.
Workers plan to continue picketing on Sunday, according to the update.






